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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101104T153000
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LOCATION:Miller Center for the Humanities\, Room 105
SUMMARY:Faculty Colloquium with Professor Rachel Cole
DESCRIPTION:\n "Pearl Prynne: Witch-Baby or a New Model of American Personhood?"\n\n\n In the first half of The Scarlet Letter\, Hawthorne's narrator—and her own mother—describe little Pearl as a demon child\, warped by the dark passion in which she was conceived. Critics\, too\, find her difficult to deal with: a generic oddity\, a peculiarly flat character in a novel otherwise remarkable for its psychological depth. Later in the novel\, however\, in scenes set apart from her mother (and which many readers have ignored) Pearl is depicted as a remarkably normal\, happy little girl. What's Hawthorne's interest in Pearl? Is she really so alien? One of Hawthorne's rare failures? Or does she represent a new way of being human\, one that avoids the sort of troubles that plague her parents and promises a solution to some of America's most pressing social problems?\n
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